Ukraine's central bank said on Tuesday an investigation into the country's largest lender, PryvatBank, which was taken into state control in 2016, showed it had been used for money-laundering and shady deals over the course of at least a decade.
One of the bank's former main shareholders, Ihor Kolomoisky, dismissed the report as “nonsense,” but a central bank deputy governor said the findings had been passed to prosecutors for use in a possible criminal investigation.
The allegations of the central bank, which echo those it made at the time of the bank's nationalization and follow a probe it commissioned by the global investigation firm Kroll, are part of a long-running dispute over PryvatBank that has spawned hundreds of legal cases.
"The investigation has identified that PryvatBank was subjected to a large-scale and coordinated fraud over at least a 10-year period ending in December 2016, which resulted in the bank suffering a loss of at least $5.5 billion," the central bank said in a statement.
The bank was nationalized as part of an International Monetary Fund-backed drive to clean up the financial system.
Finance Minister Oleksandr Danylyuk has said the resulting legal fights will be a litmus test for the effectiveness of law enforcement.
The central bank, which asked Kroll and other international companies to dig into PryvatBank's finances, said the investigation had revealed that 95 percent of corporate loans extended by the lender during the period had gone to companies linked to the former owners and their affiliates.
"It is nonsense, which there is no point commenting on," ex-shareholder Kolomoisky told online newspaper Ukrainska Pravda in response to the central bank's statement.
"The main question is where was the money withdrawn to and when? All the rest is fiction," he said.
He has launched lawsuits to challenge the nationalization, including a move to prevent Ukraine cooperating with external companies to investigate the reasons for PryvatBank's insolvency.
The former owners have long disputed the central bank's assessment of PryvatBank's finances and say it was nationalized for political reasons.
Gennadiy Bogolyubov, the other main former shareholder, has previously said the Ukrainian authorities declared PryvatBank insolvent on grounds that were fabricated and unfounded, creating an “artificial hole” in the balance sheet. He did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the latest development.
The results of the Kroll audit have been passed to prosecutors for use in a possible criminal investigation into the deals made before its nationalization, central bank deputy governor Kateryna Rozhkova said at a briefing.
“We received assurances from the general prosecutor that the results of the forensic audit were received by the general prosecutor's office for use in carrying out a criminal investigation,” she said.